LEGAL ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL TRADE: WTO COMPATIBILITY AND NEGOTIATIONS

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LEGAL ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL TRADE: WTO COMPATIBILITY AND NEGOTIATIONS ON ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENTS BETWEEN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE AFRICAN, CARRIBBEAN AND PACIFIC STATES MELAKU GEBOYE DESTA FAO LEGAL PAPERS ONLINE #56

FAO is a series of articles and reports on legal issues of contemporary interest in the areas of food policy, agriculture, rural development, biodiversity, environment and natural resource management. are available at http://www.fao.org/legal/prs-ol/paper-e.htm, or by navigation to the FAO Legal Office website from the FAO homepage at http://www.fao.org/. For those without web access, email or paper copies of may be requested from the FAO Legal Office, FAO, 00100, Rome, Italy, dev-law@fao.org. Readers are encouraged to send any comments or reactions they may have regarding a Legal Paper Online to the same address. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the United Nations or the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The positions and opinions presented do not necessarily represent the views of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. FAO 2006

LEGAL ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL TRADE: WTO COMPATIBILITY AND NEGOTIATIONS ON ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENTS BETWEEN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE AFRICAN, CARRIBBEAN AND PACIFIC STATES Melaku Geboye Desta Senior Lecturer in international economic law, CEPMLP, University of Dundee, Scotland. CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 2. EPAs & THE WTO LAW ON REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS 3. EPAs AS WTO-COMPATIBLE FTAs & THE PRINCIPLE OF SPECIAL & DIFFERENTIAL TREATMENT 4. EPAs & AGRICULTURE 5. CONCLUSION: RECONCILING EPAs WITH SPECIAL & DIFFERENTIAL TREATMENT UNDER THE WTO

1. INTRODUCTION The trade relations between the EU as a bloc on the one hand and the ACP countries as a bloc on the other, have for the last three decades been based on a series of bilateral treaties designed to provide non-reciprocal preferential terms of access for the products of the latter to the markets of the former from Lomé I (1975-80), to Lomé II (1980-85), to Lomé III (1985-90), to Lomé IV (1990-1995, later revised and extended to stay until 2000, known as Lome IV bis), and finally to Cotonou (2000 to 2008). 1 It is interesting to observe at the outset that prior to Lomé a number of ACP countries had granted reverse preferences to the EEC. 2 The Lomé process was therefore not just about creation of preferential market access for the products of ACP countries to the EC; it was also about dismantling those pre- Lomé reverse preferences for EC products to access ACP markets, thereby establishing non-reciprocity as the core principle of the Lomé acquis on trade matters. This is set to change now in several important ways and the seed of that change has already been planted in the Cotonou Agreement itself. Indeed, reintroduction of reverse preferences also called reciprocity will be a fundamental feature of the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) that are being negotiated at this moment under the Cotonou agenda. 1.1 The Cotonou Agenda Cotonou is not just an agreement on trade and development relations between the EU and the ACP countries; it is also an agenda for trade negotiations towards the creation of what are called Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs). One of the many innovations of the Cotonou Agreement is its vision of future trade relations between these two blocs. In a complete departure from decades of unilateral and non-reciprocal preferential terms of access for ACP products into the EU market, embodied in time-limited treaties and accommodated by the multilateral trading system through a series of time-limited waivers, Cotonou set an ambitious agenda for the negotiation of EPAs the hallmark of which 1 The special economic arrangements between many of the ACP countries and the EC go further back in time than the 1974 Lomé I agreement, and the association agreements in the form of Yaoundé I (1963-69) and Yaoundé II (1969-75) are particularly notable. 2 See GATT Analytical Index (1995), p. 826. will be a return to the traditional principle of reciprocity. The negotiation process was formally launched in September 2002 as required by the Cotonou Agreement and is set to be concluded by the end of 2007 with the creation of EPAs as of 1 st January 2008. 3 Cotonou sets out the basic principles and objectives of the EPAs and prescribes detailed modalities for their implementation. The overall objectives of economic and trade cooperation under the Cotonou agreement include fostering the smooth and gradual integration of the ACP States into the world economy, eradication of poverty and promotion of sustainable development. The establishment of EPAs has been identified as the route towards achieving those objectives. The EPAs are intended to be instruments for development, support ACP regional integration initiatives, improve ACP preferential market access into the EC, be compatible with WTO rules, and provide special and differential treatment to all ACP states, and in particular to the LDCs and vulnerable small, landlocked and island countries. 4 We shall see later on, however, that some of these specific objectives and principles could be in tension with one another. 1.1.1 Nature of EPAs Although they are not defined anywhere in the Cotonou Agreement, EPAs are a new form of trading arrangement between the EU on the one hand and individual ACP countries or subregional groupings on the other. The EPAs will be different from all previous forms of arrangements between the EU and ACP countries in terms, inter alia, of the identity and configuration of the ACP-side of the partnership (individual ACP countries and/or sub-regions as opposed to the totality of ACP countries as a bloc), the substantive content and object of the agreements (more or less reciprocal trade liberalization compatible with WTO parameters as opposed to unilateral preferences thus far legitimized under a waiver), and duration (permanent free trade arrangements phased in over an agreed transition period as opposed to previous timelimited unilateral concessions). Some of these will be briefly discussed further below. 3 See Article 37:1; Art. 37 sets out detailed procedures for different phases of the negotiations together with their respective deadlines. 4 See First Joint Report, para. 4(b). 1

1.1.1.1 Identity and Configuration of Parties to EPAs All prior trading arrangements since Lomé I in 1975 were negotiated between the EC as a bloc and the ACP countries as a bloc and the resulting EC import regime applied equally to all ACP countries, with an exception for LDCs which was introduced later in the process. For purposes of the discussion here we will exclude the LDCs, as they are treated separately under Cotonou as well as the WTO, and ask the following question about the remaining group: who are going to be the parties on the ACP side of the EPAs the totality of ACP countries just like before? Individual ACP countries? Or ACP subregional RTAs (e.g. SADC, ECOWAS, etc.)? While this question is crucial, it is also among the least understood. Article 37.5 of the Cotonou Agreement is the most relevant provision on this issue: Negotiations of the economic partnership agreements will be undertaken with ACP countries which consider themselves in a position to do so, at the level they consider appropriate and in accordance with the procedures agreed by the ACP Group, taking into account regional integration process within the ACP. This in effect excludes the possibility of a single EPA that will be negotiated and accepted ACP-wide; rather, the EPAs will be negotiated and concluded between the EU on the one hand and each ACP country or groups of countries in a sub-region on the other. Apart from that, Cotonou does not set any limits on the level of aggregation of ACP countries, short of their totality, in the negotiation and execution of the EPAs, leaving the definition of geographical regions to the ACP states themselves. At another point, the Cotonou Agreement adds that, to the maximum extent possible, regional integration programmes should correspond to programmes of existing regional organisations with a mandate for economic integration. 5 The negotiation process so far also confirms this to be the case. Right at the opening session of the EPA negotiations in September 2002, an agreement was reached to have a first phase in negotiations at an all-acp-ec level addressing horizontal issues of interest to all parties and then move to a second phase which would be at the level of ACP countries and regions, and would address specific 5 Article 7 of Annex IV to the Cotonou Agreement. commitments. 6 Furthermore, since the launch of the second phase in October 2003, five regions (Central Africa, West Africa, Eastern and Southern Africa, the Caribbean and the Southern African Development Community) have already commenced negotiations while the Pacific region is expected to start in September 2004. From this, one may conclude that a single EPA between all the ACP countries on the one hand and the EU on the other is no longer an option. Indeed, the EU Commission (draft) mandate to negotiate EPAs specifically provides that the object of the negotiations is to establish EPAs with ACP sub-groups defined in accordance with the provisions of Article 37(5) of the Cotonou Agreement. 7 Finally, speaking at the opening session of the SADC-EU negotiations towards EPAs in Windhoek, Namibia on 8 th July 2004, EU development commissioner Poul Nielson confirmed that [n]egotiating at the regional level, rather than with all ACP, is an essential feature of this approach. 8 This means that the whole process envisages any number of ACP countries short of their totality as partners of the EU in as many future EPAs. Except in the one scenario where the EU could be negotiating EPAs with individual ACP countries, the negotiation of EPAs will therefore be done between two RTAs the EU (which could be taken as a customs union for purposes of GATT Art. XXIV, see infra for a discussion) and ACP subregional RTAs or their intermediate versions. This is also what was envisaged by the Cotonou Agreement, which provides that Economic and trade cooperation shall build on regional integration initiatives of ACP States, bearing in mind that regional integration is a key instrument for the integration of ACP countries into the world economy. 9 The first Joint Report of the all-acp-ec Phase of the EPA negotiations goes even further and provides that EPAs first emphasis should be to consolidate ACP markets, before fostering trade integration with the EC. 10 The EPA negotiations cannot thus be seen merely as an EU-ACP affair; they are also an intra-acp matter. This gives rise to a host of complex legal and practical issues. The most important issue relates to the status of these ACP sub-regional RTAs under 6 Joint Report, para. 1. 7 Council of the EU, doc. 9930/02, 12 June 2002, p.4. 8 See Speech/04/355 at http://europa.eu.int 9 Art. 35:2 on Principles. 10 Joint Report, para. 4(b)(ii) 2

international law: are they mere facilitators of negotiations or autonomous institutions with power to conclude treaties on behalf of their respective members? The answer to this depends on a number of factors, including the nature of these ACP sub-regional RTAs, the terms of the treaties by which they are created, the mandate entrusted to them, and whether they will have independent legal personality of their own. In WTO terms, for any such ACP sub-regional RTAs to sign on behalf of their constituent members any future trade agreements with the EU, they themselves must be customs unions in the sense of GATT Article XXIV with all its implications in terms of the internal and external trade regimes of such customs unions. But, being an Article XXIV customs union alone will not be enough. As the Turkey Textiles panel observed, unless a customs union is provided with distinct rights and obligations (and therefore some WTO legal personality, such as the European Communities) each party to the customs union remains accountable for measures it adopts for application on its specific territory. 11 This implies that in order for the EU to conclude EPAs with ACP sub-regional RTAs as such, those sub-regional RTAs will need to evolve into full-fledged customs unions by the end of 2007, at the latest, in the sense of GATT Article XXIV and that those customs unions must be endowed with rights and obligations distinct from their constituent members and some form of WTO legal personality. Confirming this view, the draft negotiating guidelines prepared by the Eastern and Southern African (ESA) region provides as follows: Configurations of EPAs will be clear by the end of 2007 and if at this time an ESA country is party of a customs union it will sign an EPA as a customs union. Otherwise it will sign an EPA as a country. It cannot sign an EPA as part of a regional organisation unless the regional organisation is a customs union. 12 As the preceding argument suggests, this policy statement from the ESA negotiating guidelines is a result of need rather than choice. Indeed, it still needs to go further and say that that CU must also have legal personality independently of the constituent members. One may then wonder whether or not the existing sub-regional RTAs could metamorphose into CUs within the period up to 11 Turkey Textiles panel report, para. 9.40, footnote 272 12 See ESA-EPA Draft Negotiating Guidelines, Draft Revision 2.0 Dec. 2003, para 4. 2008. That is a possibility; indeed one may even mention such RTAs as SACU and CARICOM as already existing CUs, while COMESA is scheduled to become a CU by December 2004. 13 However, whether many of these sub-regional RTAs will evolve into fullfledged customs unions in terms of GATT Article XXIV by 2007 is far from certain. Nearly all ACP sub-regional RTAs, including COMESA, CEMAC, WAEMU, and EAC, were created taking advantage of the more lenient provisions of the Enabling clause on southsouth preferences rather than under GATT Article XXIV. As such many of these RTAs might find it difficult to satisfy even the relatively less onerous (compared to customs unions) demands set by Article XXIV for FTAs. 14 This means that the likelihood of seeing EPAs between the EU and sub-regional ACP RTAs is far from certain, thus perhaps leaving only one option for many of these subregions the conclusion of EPAs between the EU and individual ACP countries. Given that no ACP country seems to have taken a decision as yet to negotiate as an individual country while most ACP countries are already taking part in EPA negotiations through their sub-regional RTAs, the preceding suggestion might sound rather unrealistic. However, it is also worth noting that the fact that the ACP countries are negotiating as members of a subregional RTA does not necessarily imply a decision to conclude EPAs at such a level. In sum, Cotonou is vague at best on the issue. While it specifically mentions the possibility of sub-regional RTAs and individual countries becoming parties to the EPAs, it does not say anything about the ACP in its totality being a party to the EPAs. However, it declares a commitment to build EPAs on existing regional integration initiatives of the ACP countries. Indeed, reference to the EPAs is consistently expressed in the plural, effectively excluding the possibility of a single EPA between the EU on the one hand and the ACP as a bloc on the other. Nor does Cotonou tell us much as to how ACP sub-regional RTAs could be parties to EPAs. The official line, as well as the consensus approach in the literature, seems to be to assume that EPAs will be concluded between the EU on the one hand and ACP sub-regional RTAs on the other and EPAs between the EU and individual countries will be more of the exception. It appears, however, that this may not be what we will see by 2008 and probably the vice versa will be the case 13 See http://www.comesa.int 14 See WTO doc. WT/REG/W/44, 7 February 2002. 3

i.e. we may generally see EPAs between the EU and individual ACP countries while EPAs with sub-regional RTAs could be the exception. Moreover, regardless of whether EPAs are signed by individual ACP countries or subregional RTAs, it is clear that the EPAs will mark a departure from the tradition of treating all ACP countries as a bloc. 1.1.1.2 Object and Scope of the EPAs and the Role of the WTO One of the most fundamental objectives of the ongoing negotiations between the EU and ACP countries/sub-regions is to create EPAs that are compatible with WTO rules on RTAs, which generally requires reciprocal trade liberalization. This declared commitment to WTO compatibility appears to be the result of a combination of factors: (1) all members of the EU as well as nearly three-quarters of the ACP countries are already members of the WTO and bound by its system of rules; (2) the experience of the past in terms of waivers for arrangements incompatible with those rules has been neither easy nor pleasant; and (3) it appears that the trend in north-south trade relations is turning away from unilateral concessions legitimised through waivers into reciprocal arrangements concluded in accordance with WTO rules. If successful, this commitment to WTO compatibility will mean that any future trading arrangements between the EU and the ACP will exist without any need for a waiver from WTO obligations. Satisfying the legal requirements of the WTO on RTAs will be a huge challenge for several reasons, which will be discussed after a highlight of those WTO legal standards against which future EPAs will be judged. The relevant WTO legal standards are contained in GATT Articles I (on most favoured nation treatment) and XXIV (on regional trade agreements), the 1979 Enabling Clause, and to a more limited extent, Article V of the GATS. There are also some useful panel and AB reports which could shed some light into these often obscure provisions. The legal standards contained in these provisions are among the most complex and contentious so much so that one may even question whether a commitment to compliance means anything at all practical terms. 2. EPAs & THE WTO LAW ON REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS 2.1 Background From the perspective of WTO law, the issue of regional trading arrangements is primarily an issue of principle. Having laid its foundations on the principle of non-discrimination, the trading system treats all sorts of favouritism between countries with suspicion. The first paragraph of GATT s very first provision declares that any advantage, favour, privilege or immunity granted by any contracting party to any product originating in or destined for any other country shall be accorded immediately and unconditionally to the like product originating in or destined for the territories of all other contracting parties. This give-the-bestto-everyone principle called the most favoured nation (MFN) treatment clause forms the foundation stone of the trading system. At the same time, however, we also know that almost every WTO member today belongs to one or more RTAs, which by definition means that almost every country gives (and receives) preferential terms of access over what it gives (and receives) at MFN level. The number of such preferential arrangements has grown rapidly over the past few years, but it is not a new phenomenon at all. It is interesting to note here that Kenneth Dam opened his 1963 article on RTAs with the following observation: The last dozen years have seen a proliferation of customs unions and free trade areas of unforeseen proportions. 15 This is an observation that would be even truer today. 16 The question will then be the following: if the principle of non-discrimination is such a core principle of the trading system how can we explain the fact that we live in a world of ever 15 Regional Economic Arrangements and the GATT: The Legacy of a Misconception", University of Chicago Law Review, vol. 30, No. 4, summer 1963, P. 615. 16 As of 5 December 2003, 273 RTAs have been notified to the GATT/WTO. Of these, 227 agreements were notified under GATT Article XXIV, of which 143 are still in force today; 19 agreements were notified under the Enabling Clause; and 27 under GATS Article V. See WTO doc. WT/REG/13, 5 December 2003, para. 4. Of these, 107 were notified between 1948 and end-1994, while the remaining 166 were notified between 1995 and end 2003. 4

proliferating RTAs which are inherently discriminatory? In legal terms, the answer is to be found principally in GATT Article XXIV, supplemented by the so-called Enabling Clause of 1979 for developing countries, and GATS Article V for RTAs in the area of services, this time called Economic Integration Agreements (EIAs). The legal landscape created by the interaction of all these principles and exceptions as applied over the years will be discussed in some detail here. 2.2 GATT Article XXIV The most important rules of the WTO system on RTAs are contained in GATT Article XXIV. For a system that professes to be founded on the principle of non-discrimination, it is interesting to note that GATT Article XXIV:4, the provision which sets forth the overriding and pervasive purpose for Article XXIV 17, starts by recognizing the desirability of increasing freedom of trade by the development, through voluntary agreements, of closer integration between the economies of the countries parties to such agreements. It then goes further and stipulates that the purpose of a customs union or of a free-trade area should be to facilitate trade between the constituent territories and not to raise barriers to the trade of other contracting parties with such territories. This purposive paragraph is followed by detailed operative provisions which set forth the substantive and procedural conditions that must be satisfied before a discriminatory RTA could be justified under the exceptions of Article XXIV. However, the meaning of Article XXIV has proved to be so contentious and its practical administration so difficult that only in one of the over 350 RTAs notified so far to GATT/WTO were members able to reach a clear-cut decision on their compatibility with the rules. 18 The following discussion only summarizes the legal issues that will have an impact on the negotiation and outcome of the EPAs. Article XXIV distinguishes essentially between two forms of RTAs free trade areas (FTAs) and customs unions (CUs) or interim agreements leading to the formation of either of these two. The main difference between these two forms of RTAs relates essentially to the depth of integration attained or 17 AB in Turkey Textiles, Para. 57 18 That single exception relates to the 1994 customs union between the Czech and Slovak republics. contemplated among their respective members. Interim agreements in both cases are required to include a plan and schedule for the formation of the intended RTAs within a reasonable length of time. The reasonable length of time for interim agreements leading to the formation of customs unions has been defined to mean a period not exceeding 10 years unless justified by exceptional circumstances. 19 No such definition was provided for interim agreements leading to the formation of FTAs. We shall see later on that the EPAs will first come in the form of interim agreements leading to the formation of FTAs (rather than CUs) and the length of the transition period permissible under Article XXIV will be important. However, even if EPAs will only aspire to be FTAs and not CUs, we shall also see that the law relating to customs unions will play a role in the process because, as argued earlier, ACP sub-regions can conclude EPAs with the EU only if they constitute themselves as CUs in the first place. The substantive requirements of both FTAs as well as CUs are found in paragraphs 5 and 8 of Article XXIV. 2.2.1 CUs v. FTAs: where will the EPAs fall? Article XXIV, paragraph 8 is the definitional provision for both CUs and FTAs while paragraph 5 provides for the minimum substantive conditions that should be met by CUs and FTAs relating to internal trade amongst their constituent members and external trade with third parties. 2.2.1.1 Customs Unions Definition According to Article XXIV:8(a), a customs union is defined to mean the substitution of a single customs territory for two or more customs territories. 20 A customs union is therefore a union of two or more customs territories with important implications for the flow of trade within that union (internal trade) as well as between the union and other countries (external trade) for each of which detailed requirements are listed. The requirements for CUs are found in paragraph 8(a)(i) on internal trade, and paragraphs 8(a)(ii) and 5(a) on external trade. 19 See Uruguay Round Understanding on GATT Article XXIV, para 3. 20 Paragraph 2 of Article XXIV defines a customs territory to mean any territory with respect to which separate tariffs or other regulations of commerce are maintained for a substantial part of the trade of such territory with other territories. 5

Requirements on Internal Trade Regarding internal trade within customs unions, sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) provides that duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce (except, where necessary, those permitted under Articles XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV and XX) are eliminated with respect to substantially all the trade between the constituent territories of the union or at least with respect to substantially all the trade in products originating in such territories. Four things are worth noting here: (1) the rule relates to duties as well as other restrictive regulations of commerce applying to trade between the members; (2) the requirement is to eliminate, and not just reduce, these duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce; (3) the requirement to eliminate applies to substantially all, and not to all, the trade; and (4) this requirement to eliminate internal trade restrictions is subject to exceptions allowed under specified provisions. Although all of these elements are important, the concept of substantially all the trade is the most controversial and the most relevant particularly to the identity of each of the intending parties to the EPAs. The same requirement also exists for FTAs, and the discussion below applies to both forms of RTAs. In broad terms, the requirement to liberalize substantially all the trade between the constituent members of a CU is something that naturally flows from the object and purpose of RTAs as stated under paragraph 4 of Article XXIV: the desire to facilitate trade through voluntary closer economic integration between countries without adversely affecting the trade interests of others. However, the practical question of how much trade is substantially all the trade has proven to be a difficult one for trade diplomats and lawyers over the years. At least two major approaches quantitative (a certain percentage of actual or potential trade) and qualitative (going beyond percentages so as to look at whether any major sector is excluded, etc.) or a combination of them have been suggested so far. There is no consistent practice either on the matter. The EC has played a major role in the development of the law in this area, as in many others. When the EEC Treaty was brought before a GATT committee for the consistency with Article XXIV of its provisions on the association of overseas territories, the Community argued that a free trade area should be considered as having been achieved for substantially all the trade when the volume of liberalized trade reached 80 per cent of total trade. 21 However, many other members rejected this approach of fixing a percentage figure as inappropriate, preferring instead a case-by-case approach which considers every case on its merits. Although the EC grew more and more sympathetic to this argument over time, 22 it still maintains its quantitative approach to the definition. Following its use of a 90 percent threshold in its Trade, Development and Cooperation Agreement (TDCA) with South Africa made up of commitments to liberalize about 94 per cent of EU imports from South Africa and about 86 per cent of South African imports from the EU over a 12 year transition period the EU is currently presenting this 90 per cent threshold as the WTO criterion of the substantially all trade requirement. Requirements on External Trade Regarding the external trade of members of customs unions with non-members, subparagraph 8(a)(ii) provides that substantially the same duties and other regulations of commerce are applied by each of the members of the union to the trade of territories not included in the union. A logical follow-up to the definition of a customs union as the substitution of a single customs territory for two or more customs territories would normally be a requirement to adopt a single trade regime vis-à-vis all third countries. However, by requiring only substantially the same and not the same duties and other regulations of commerce to be applied by members of a customs union to the trade of non-members, sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii) has made it clear that the formation of a customs union does not necessarily mean the total disappearance of the constituent members as independent players in international trade regulation. Indeed, precisely because of this flexibility afforded by Article XXIV on the external trade regime of a customs union, the Turkey Textiles panel went as far as concluding that as a general rule, a situation where constituent members have comparable trade regulations 21 See GATT Analytical Index (1995), p. 824. 22 For example, during GATT Working Party meetings that considered the accession of Portugal to the EEC, the Community was quoted as saying that no exact definition of the expression [substantially all the trade] existed and that the precise figures would vary from case to case according to several factors. At any rate, percentages were established as a general indicator of the trade covered by the Agreement and were not to be regarded as a conclusive factor. See GATT Analytical Index (1995), p. 824. 6

having similar effects with respect to the trade with third countries, would generally meet the qualitative dimension of the requirements of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii). 23 This was later found by the AB to have been too low a standard to satisfy the requirements of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii), which, the AB said, requires the constituent members of a customs union to adopt substantially the same trade regulations. In our view, comparable trade regulations having similar effects do not meet this standard. A higher degree of sameness is required by the terms of sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii). 24 It is notable that the AB left intact the panel s interpretation that sub-paragraph 8(a)(ii) allows Members to form a customs union, as in this case, where one constituent member is entitled to impose quantitative restrictions under a special transitional regime and the other constituent member is not. 25 Sub-paragraph (ii) on the external trade regime of customs unions, unlike sub-paragraph (i) on internal trade, does not explicitly permit the maintenance of quantitative restrictions. The Turkey Textiles panel observed that the plain meaning of the wording used in these two subparagraphs 26 implies a difference in approach between efforts at internal trade liberalization among constituent members of a customs union where the maintenance of some quantitative restrictions (as restrictive regulations of commerce) is explicitly permitted (see paragraph 8(a)(i)), and their respective external policies with third countries where paragraph 8(a)(ii) contains no specific authorization relating to the maintenance of quantitative restrictions. 27 One should not however read too much into this difference. The absence of specific authorization relating to quantitative restrictions in the external trade regime of customs unions appears to be because it is too obvious to mention, while it is not so obvious in respect of the internal trade regime applying within customs unions due to their indeterminate position between a single customs territory and a collection of independent political and economic entities. The sort of restrictions authorised under subparagraph (i) are restrictions that are normally available to all member countries in their relations with other WTO member countries. Needless to say, joining or forming a customs union cannot imply for countries obligations 23 See Turkey Textiles panel report, para. 9.151. 24 See Turkey Textiles AB report, para. 50. 25 See Turkey Textiles panel report, para. 9.151. 26 of Article XXIV:8(a)(i) and (ii). 27 See Turkey Textiles panel report, para. 9.150. towards non-cu members that would be more onerous than what would be required of them as individual members of the multilateral trading system. The implication of the AB interpretation of the requirements on the external trade regime of CUs, together with the explicit authorization of quantitative restrictions on internal trade under sub-paragraph 8(a)(i), is that (1) ACP countries can establish customs unions amongst themselves at the sub-regional level while each of them still maintains otherwise legitimate quantitative or other trade restrictions on some of their internal as well as external trade; and (2) some ACP countries members of such customs unions will still have the right to maintain such restrictions on selected third countries while the other members of the customs unions may not necessarily have such restrictions against any third countries. A familiar example here is the pre-1993 banana import regime applying in EEC member countries, which ranged from the tariff-free import system in Germany to the tariff-only import restrictions in the Benelux to the various quantitative restrictions in France and the UK to the complete ban on importation in Spain. A more recent and relevant example would be the new Italian labelling law (July 2003) requiring that milk production facilities indicate on the label the location of the farm where the milk originated. 28 No such requirements exist under EU law or in other EU countries; and yet, no one seriously claims that the EC does not satisfy the requirements of a CU merely because its members did not have a common external trade regime for bananas or lack common rules on the traceability of dairy products. 29 However, any such restrictions need in all cases to be permissible under WTO law. The notorious cases on Bananas, although involving alleged FTAs rather than CUs, are a good example here. In Bananas I the EEC argued unsuccessfully that the many restrictive measures on the importation of bananas, including the total ban maintained by Spain, were permitted under GATT Article XXIV. The EEC specifically argued that Article XXIV:5 contained an exception not only to 28 See O Connor & Co., The EC Traceability and Equivalence Rules in Light of the SPS Agreement: A Review of the Main Legal Issues,(December 2003), http://agritrade.cta.int/agritrade_report_o%27connor.pdf P. 9. 29 See the Bananas I & II cases challenging the EEC s successive banana import regimes of 1992 and 1993 respectively, also discussed infra. 7

Article I but also to Article Xl (and, accordingly, to Article XIII), and applied to its relationships with the ACP countries, which it said were free trade area[s] between the EEC and each of the ACP countries in the sense of Article XXIV:5. 30 According to this argument, therefore, Article XXIV would justify not only discrimination in violation of the MFN principle of Article I but also a quantitative restriction in violation of Article XI. The panel rejected this EC argument as follows: The Panel noted that Article XXIV:5 to 8 permitted the contracting parties to deviate from their obligations under other provisions of the General Agreement for the purpose of forming a customs union or free-trade area, or adopting an interim agreement leading to the formation of a customs union or free-trade area, but not for any other purpose. Article XXIV:5 to 8 therefore did not provide contracting parties with a justification for restrictive import measures as such; it merely provided them - within the limits set out in this provision - with a justification for not applying to imports originating in such a union or area the restrictive import measures that they were permitted to impose under other provisions of the General Agreement. The Panel therefore considered that the import restrictions on bananas could not be justified by Article XXIV. 31 More recently, the Turkey Textiles dispute was also essentially about a Turkish defence that the quantitative restrictions it imposed on a range of textile products coming from India in violation of GATT Article XI were justified under Article XXIV of GATT as these measures were adopted pursuant to (and on the occasion of the formation of) its customs union with the European Communities. 32 The panel, just like the Bananas I panel discussed earlier, rejected this Turkish argument and observed: even on the occasion of the formation of a customs union, Members cannot impose otherwise incompatible quantitative restrictions. According to this panel, the wording of Article XXIV does not authorize a departure from the obligations contained in Articles XI and XIII of GATT. 33 The AB, while affirming the ultimate conclusion of the panel in this respect, took a different view. According to the AB, the chapeau of paragraph 5 of Article XXIV is the key provision for resolving the issue and that this chapeau 30 See Bananas I, paras. 222 and 246 31 See Bananas I, para. 358 32 See Turkey Textiles panel report, para. 9.26. 33 Turkey Textiles panel report, paras. 9.188-89. makes it clear that Article XXIV may, under certain conditions, justify the adoption of a measure which is inconsistent with certain other GATT provisions, and may be invoked as a possible defence to a finding of inconsistency. The AB further argued this could happen if two cumulative conditions were met: First, the party claiming the benefit of this defence must demonstrate that the measure at issue is introduced upon the formation of a customs union that fully meets the requirements of sub-paragraphs 8(a) and 5(a) of Article XXIV. And, second, that party must demonstrate that the formation of that customs union would be prevented if it were not allowed to introduce the measure at issue. However, the AB found out that the second of these conditions was not met in the case before it: We agree with the Panel that had Turkey not adopted the same quantitative restrictions that are applied by the European Communities, this would not have prevented Turkey and the European Communities from meeting the requirements of sub-paragraph 8(a)(i) of Article XXIV, and consequently from forming a customs union. It however cautioned that we make no finding on the issue of whether quantitative restrictions found to be inconsistent with Article XI and Article XIII of the GATT 1994 will ever be justified by Article XXIV. We find only that the quantitative restrictions at issue in the appeal in this case were not so justified. 34 In sum, although the discussion in this section has been about CUs, it is also possible to draw conclusions of a broader reach: the provisions of GATT Article XXIV should be interpreted to mean that member countries are allowed to violate other provisions to the extent necessary for them to be parties to RTAs that satisfy the requirements set by Article XXIV itself. GATT Article I is so far the only provision the violation of which has been found to be necessary for the creation of RTAs. However, although it is difficult to imagine what other GATT provisions would pass this necessity test for the creation of RTAs, the AB has opted to leave the door open on this issue. This also means, for example, that the justifiability under Article XXIV of otherwise WTO-incompatible non-tariff barriers that may be introduced against third country imports by ACP countries on the occasion of the formation of EPAs will remain an open question. Finally, while paragraph 8(a) provides the definitional elements of a customs union, 34 See Turkey Textiles AB report, paras. 42-65. 8

paragraph 5(a) goes a step further and sets important additional conditions on the external trade regime of the union: the duties and other regulations of commerce imposed at the institution of any such union or interim agreement in respect of trade with contracting parties not parties to such union or agreement shall not on the whole be higher or more restrictive than the general incidence of the duties and regulations of commerce applicable in the constituent territories prior to the formation of such union or the adoption of such interim agreement, as the case may be. Four points are worth noting here: (1) the creation of a customs union may not be used as an opportunity to roll back prior liberalisation measures of the constituent members vis-à-vis non-members; (2) the comparison is between the new single common external trade regime and the many individual external trade regimes of the constituent members vis-à-vis third countries previously; (3) this comparison is not item-by-item, but general; and (4) there is a distinction between duties and other regulations of commerce in that the new duties are not to be higher (quantitative) while other regulations are not to be more restrictive (qualitative). The implications of these requirements for EPAs will be discussed later on. 2.2.1.2 Free Trade Areas Definition and Requirements on Internal Trade Article XXIV:8, sub-paragraph (b), defines a free trade area as a group of two or more customs territories in which the duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce (except, where necessary, those permitted under Articles XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV and XX) are eliminated on substantially all the trade between the constituent territories in products originating in such territories. A free trade area is therefore an arrangement between countries which seeks to create conditions for the free(r) flow of trade amongst themselves while preserving the independent customs territories of the constituent parties and with no need for harmonizing their respective foreign trade regimes vis-à-vis non-fta countries. Most of the observations made earlier about the definitional elements of a CU could also be made about this definition of FTAs and the comparison of FTAs and CUs in the next subsection will develop this further. It is worth pointing out nonetheless at this stage that while customs unions are defined in terms of their internal and external trade dimensions, the parallel provision defining FTAs does not say anything as regards the type of measures to be applied by members of FTAs vis-à-vis non-members. There is also a small difference between these two definitions in respect of their product coverage for internal purposes. While sub- Article 8:(a)(i) on customs unions requires elimination of duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce with respect to substantially all the trade between the constituent territories of the union or at least with respect to substantially all the trade in products originating in such territories, sub- Article 8(b) on FTAs requires elimination of duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce on substantially all the trade between the constituent territories in products originating in such territories. The elimination of duties and other restrictive regulations of commerce on products originating within members of RTAs is a minimum requirement for customs unions (the preference being to extend such treatment to all products traded between those countries regardless of the origin of the goods) while this is all that is required for FTAs. The legal effect in both cases remains the same; but, though hortatory, the wider reach of customs unions has some symbolic value. It also means that while determination of origin could be merely optional in the case of customs unions, it is almost always mandatory for FTAs (unless of course an FTA also opts to go for elimination of barriers on all goods coming from or through other members regardless of their true origin an unlikely scenario in practice). Requirements on External Trade The absence of reference to the external trade dimension of FTAs in the definition does not however mean there are no requirements for FTAs in this respect; only that they are found in paragraph 5 rather than the definition provision of paragraph 8. Paragraph 8(b) provides the definitional elements of an FTA in terms only of internal trade, but paragraph 5(b) goes a step further and sets important conditions relating to the external trade regime of the FTA: with respect to a free-trade area, or an interim agreement leading to the formation of a freetrade area, the duties and other regulations of commerce maintained in each of the constituent territories and applicable at the formation of such free-trade area or the adoption of such interim agreement to the trade of contracting parties not included in such area or not parties to such agreement 9

shall not be higher or more restrictive than the corresponding duties and other regulations of commerce existing in the same constituent territories prior to the formation of the freetrade area, or interim agreement as the case may be. The language of this paragraph is similar to that of paragraph 8(a) on the external trade regime of customs unions; but there are also important differences. Firstly, the objective in both cases is fairly clear: the principal purpose of sub-paragraphs 5(a) and (b) is to make sure that the pre-rta level of openness to third country imports in each of the members of the new RTA would remain not adversely affected by the formation of the RTA. The impact of RTAs on third parties varies depending, at least in part, on the type of RTA created, i.e. whether it is a customs union or a free trade area. In the case of a customs union, the national tariffs and other trade regulations are generally replaced by a common external tariff and a common system of other external regulations of commerce, while in the case of a free trade area, the distinct national trade regimes remain intact. Consequently, the assessment of whether the formation of an RTA has adversely affected the trade interests of non-members is more complicated in a CU than in an FTA. As FTAs are not required to harmonize their external trade regimes and indeed no new customs territory is created by an FTA the comparison here is between the external trade regime of each member of the FTA applying to third countries post-fta and that same country s external trade regime pre- FTA. Put differently, every third country can assess whether it has been adversely affected by merely comparing the duties and other regulations of commerce facing its goods in every FTA member country post-fta vis-à-vis that which prevailed in each of those same countries pre-fta. The comparison simply is between one country s external trade regimes at two different points in time. In the case of a customs union, however, the comparison is not just between trade regimes at two different times but also between two different entities the pre-cu individual national trade regimes against the aggregate post-cu, CU-wide, trade regimes. As such, while the requirement in the case of customs unions is for the new trade regime not to be on the whole higher or more restrictive than the general incidence of such duties and regulations of commerce pre-cu, the requirement in the case of FTAs is for the new regimes not to be higher or more restrictive than the corresponding duties and other regulations of commerce pre-fta. The better precision in language in respect of FTAs compared to CUs is a result of the fact that in the latter case a completely new external trade regime effectively replaces the multiplicity of prior national external trade regimes, making direct comparison impossible. There are also important differences under Article XXIV:5 with respect to tariffs and other trade regulations for CUs on the one hand and for FTAs on the other. 35 In the case of a CU, the comparison is between the duties and other regulations of commerce imposed at its institution and the general incidence of the duties and regulations of commerce applicable in the constituent territories prior to the formation of such union. In the case of an FTA, this comparison is between the duties and other regulations of commerce maintained in each of the constituent territories and applicable at its formation and the corresponding duties and other regulations of commerce existing in the same constituent territories prior to the formation. (Italics added) The significance of these differences in wording had been debated for long. Thanks to the Uruguay Round Understanding on Article XXIV, we now know that the duties and charges to be taken into consideration in the evaluation process for customs unions shall be the applied rates of duty. 36 This is preceded by the following: The evaluation under paragraph 5(a) of Article XXIV of the general incidence of the duties and other regulations of commerce applicable before and after the formation of a customs union shall in respect of duties and charges be based upon an overall assessment of weighted average tariff rates and of customs duties collected. This therefore shows that the applied duty is used on both sides of the comparison. Importantly for our purposes here, no such interpretation was adopted with respect to the parallel provision of Article XXIV:5(b) on FTAs. The implication of this could be debated and one might still argue whether the comparison under Article XXIV:5(b) should be with the applied duty or the bound duty. However, the fact that these two provisions were couched in different wording from the outset and an explicit understanding has interpreted sub- Article 5(a) on CUs to mean applied duties while leaving it untouched in respect of sub- Article 5(b) on FTAs should provide sufficient grounds to conclude that the duties for 35 For more on this, see WTO/REG/W/16, p. 3. 36 See para. 2 of the Understanding, italics added. 10